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Thursday, 22 November, 2001, 00:07 GMT
Analysis: Adding value to the tables
Wigmore High School:
Wigmore High School: Raising pupils' attainment
By BBC education correspondent Mike Baker

Are school league tables finally coming of age or are they on their way out? It seems to depend partly on where you live.

The 2001 tables are the 10th to appear in England, where they have become a hardy perennial in the school year.


It may be that we are approaching a more mature attitude towards league tables

However, in Wales and Northern Ireland they will not be appearing as education ministers in both countries have decided they are unnecessary.

Scotland, which failed to publish last year because of the exam marking fiasco, is publishing two years' worth in 2001.

But how long will it be before the Scots follow Wales and Northern Ireland?

Information for parents

Let's remind ourselves how this all began.

Schools had just settled into the 1991 autumn term when the then Conservative Education Secretary, Kenneth Clarke, promised to "take the mystery" out of education by publishing comparative tables of school examination results.

His announcement was a "double whammy" for schools as he also heralded the creation of a new schools inspectorate, an organisation we now know as Ofsted.

The two new policies, part of the "Parent's Charter", were intended to increase the amount of information given to parents and so improve school accountability.

On that day in September 1991, Mr Clarke - a man who liked to "call a test a test, not an assessment" - told me in a BBC interview that he did not want the league tables to be too complicated.

As he put it: "Some people argue all kinds of complicated information should be added to it so that nobody really can understand it unless they have got a PhD in statistics. We want simple, straightforward factual information."

'Crude'

At the time, his opposite number - Labour's education spokesman, a certain Jack Straw - said league tables based on "crude" or raw results would tell parents only how selective a school was.

He advocated a "value added" measure which would give some indication of the effectiveness of the teaching at different schools.

Well, it may have taken several years, but we do now have at least a "pilot" scheme for a "value added" index of schools.

News imageClick here for a sample "value added" table

It covers just 200 or so schools but the idea is to use this as a stepping-stone to "value added" tables for all schools next year.

How it works

So what does the "value added" measure tell us?

It is an attempt to measure the improvement pupils achieve across two periods: First, from age 11 to age 14 and, second, from age 14 to 16.

This is done by using as a base-line pupils' scores from their tests in English, maths and science taken at the end of primary school.

Progress is then measured by how much those same pupils have improved their results in the national tests at 14 and then again at 16 when they take their GCSEs.

As this tracks the progress of the same group of students it should, in theory, be a reasonable indication of how well they have been taught or, put another way, of the effectiveness of the school.

Coasting

It therefore eliminates the inevitability of grammar and selective independent schools always topping the league tables just because they take only the brightest pupils at age 11.

music lesson
How much do parents really value league tables?
If such schools are to do well in the "value added" tables they must ensure these bright pupils do even better at 14 and 16 than they did at age 11. If they just "coast along", the value added index will show this up.

Despite what Ken Clarke says about requiring a PhD in statistics, the "value added" tables should be reasonably easy to read as the index has been presented as a measure centred around 100.

Schools which score over 100 are those where pupils have, on average, made more progress than the same age group nationally. Those with scores below 100 are schools where pupils have made less progress.

Too late?

A huge effort has gone into all this. But are league tables finally reaching a level of sophistication just at the point when the very concept of league tables is losing support?

It will be interesting to see whether parents in Wales and Northern Ireland feel they are losing out. They will, of course, still be able to get the results from their own local school as these will still be published in its prospectus.

There must also be some doubt over just how much parents care about league tables.

A couple of years ago, research from the London School of Economics suggested that half of the parents of secondary school children had either not seen the league tables or said they did not understand them.

Pointer

A more recent study from a marketing firm suggested exam results come 10th in a list of parents' top 20 priorities for schools.

However, parents may say they do not make school choice decisions based on league tables but, in my experience, most are at least interested to see how their local schools have performed. It is a starting point, if no more, for parents trying to choose a secondary school.

It may be that we are approaching a more mature attitude towards league tables.

In the early days, they attracted huge attention. While this may have motivated some schools to greater efforts, it could also be disheartening to those at the bottom.

Now, with any luck, newspapers will get less excited by who is at the top or bottom of the tables while parents will be able to use the "value added" index to separate those schools which are doing well simply because they have a talented intake, from those which do well through excellent teaching.


The table below shows part of the data from this year's "value added" pilot involving about 200 schools, broadly representative of state and independent schools across the country.

It shows what percentage of pupils have special educational needs (SEN), what percentage get at least five A* to C grades at GCSE, and the new "VA" measure of how much they have been brought on since their tests at age 14.

More than 100 indicates more progress than the same age group nationally; below 100 means they have made less progress.

Click the name of any school to go to its page in the main tables.

InstitutionSENA*-CVA
Abbot's Hill School 98%100.9
Abraham Moss High School44.4%37%103.1
Adams' Grammar School 98%103.0
Albany School 22%98.5
Andrew Marvell School 31%98.3
Aylward School49.4%28%101.2
Balshaw's Church of England High School6.2%61%101.9
Barnwood Park High School for Girls 33%98.2
Barr's Hill School and Community College3.5%19%91.1
Beacon Hill High School28.7%24%90.4
Bellemoor School21.7%45%97.6
Belper School12.0%57%99.8
Beths Grammar School for Boys11.3%100%105.5
Birchwood High School8.1%49%96.9
Bircotes and Harworth Community School1.2%33%104.6
Bishop Challoner Catholic School0.5%57%98.5
Bishop Vesey's Grammar School4.1%94%96.5
Bishop Wulstan Catholic School 34%93.5
Blessed Hugh Faringdon Catholic School16.9%40%98.6
Bodmin Community College 44%96.7
Bolton Muslim Girls' School 43%108.7
Breeze Hill School20.5%20%103.2
Brentwood Ursuline Convent High School4.1%86%104.5
Broadlands School13.6%44%101.5
Burford School and Community College 58%96.3
"Cardinal Langley Roman Catholic High School, Rochdale"12.2%42%99.6
Cardinal Wiseman Catholic School7.7%39%93.9
Carter Community School 28%96.0
Castle Manor Community Upper School25.3%30%97.4
Chantry High School and Sixth Form Centre13.1%44%96.7
Chesterton Community College16.7%46%100.9
Chipping Sodbury School6.5%41%95.1
City of Portsmouth Girls' School 50%98.9
Claremont Fan Court School24.6%67%97.7
Clayton High School5.9%68%100.7
Clifton College15.6%84%111.9
Clifton Comprehensive School 28%100.3
Coleridge Community College41.4%25%97.2
Collegiate High School16.9%31%92.3
Colne Community School19.9%50%99.5
Colston's Collegiate School 92%98.3
Coombe Girls' School27.9%58%101.4
Coundon Court School and Community College 69%103.7
Crompton House CofE School 80%102.2
Dartford Grammar School for Girls12.1%96%101.4
Dartford Technology College0.7%44%99.1
Dawlish Community College 47%96.5
"De Lisle Catholic School, Loughborough" 64%99.5
Deacon's School28.5%59%104.7
Djanogly City Technology College7.7%52%98.6
Drayton Manor High School1.3%55%104.2
Duke of York's Royal Military School 97%100.2
Dyke House Comprehensive School0.6%37%102.2
East Barnet School20.0%51%98.8
East Brighton College of Media Arts42.1%14%90.1
Ellesmere Port Catholic High School23.2%48%104.0
Elliott Durham School58.1%9%94.9
Eltham Green School51.3%16%99.3
Epsom and Ewell High School1.9%43%96.9
Ercall Wood Technology College17.0%48%101.7
Eston Park School11.4%12%96.0
Estover Community College 28%101.6
Farlingaye High School1.8%67%101.1
Finham Park School 69%97.3
Firth Park Community College26.0%20%99.9
Fulneck School18.2%66%103.3
Garforth Community College9.7%70%94.5
Giggleswick School 83%100.4
Graveney School43.8%72%96.9
Halyard High School22.4%21%92.4
Hampton Community College24.2%45%98.6
Hanson School12.6%44%96.5
Harborne Hill School 23%91.7
Harris CofE High School 28%93.1
Hartland School 28%96.8
Harvington School 77%101.6
Heart of England School 71%100.6
Heath Park High School38.9%53%104.2
Hellesdon High School24.4%39%98.5
Hextable School76.2%27%94.7
Hobart High School23.1%64%96.4
Holden Lane High School6.6%37%95.3
Holly Lodge High School31.1%44%101.6
Holmesdale Technology College 14%96.8
Horsforth School13.6%63%97.7
Howden School18.1%38%95.0
Ipswich High School6.2%100%97.9
John Paul II School46.3%27%101.4
Keldholme School29.8%17%96.3
Kelsey Park School 23%95.5
King Edward VII School20.4%64%97.5
Kings School Senior 65%99.7
Kirk Hallam Community Technology College24.7%58%100.5
Knowles Hill School2.8%48%100.1
Lawrence Sheriff School 98%101.1
Levenshulme High School 45%100.7
Longsands College 60%100.6
Longton High School 22%93.5
"Lordswood Girls' School and The Sixth Form Centre, Harborne"13.0%58%109.1
Madni Muslim Girls' High School 48%106.8
"Malvern, The Chase" 58%95.9
Marden High School13.6%53%97.7
Marlwood School0.5%74%98.0
Merlyn Rees Community High School 11%97.3
Monkwearmouth School 53%103.4
Mortimer Comprehensive School0.5%42%98.5
Mount Carmel RC Technology College for Girls22.0%35%99.2
Newquay Tretherras School16.9%59%100.4
North Kesteven School9.6%53%99.4
Northallerton College FMD29.2%51%96.0
Norton College20.1%52%97.0
"Notre Dame High School, Norwich"8.4%66%99.2
Oakwood Park Grammar School5.5%95%97.9
Oldbury Wells School 51%95.7
Ordsall Hall School14.6%43%101.6
Paget High School19.9%23%100.6
Park Hall School1.1%33%94.6
Park High School16.4%66%103.6
Park High School 26%96.1
Patcham High School43.0%33%100.8
Pensby High School for Girls14.1%67%98.3
Plume School9.6%46%99.6
Plymouth High School for Girls0.9%95%103.8
Poynton High School7.2%74%96.7
Putteridge High School15.6%45%102.3
Queen Elizabeth High School9.9%68%99.7
Queen's Park High School37.3%19%96.1
Queen's Park High School 53%93.6
Ridgewood High School19.2%57%95.9
Risedale Community College FMD23.6%19%92.2
Rising Brook High School 23%97.1
Rock Ferry High School16.2%25%100.2
Saint George's Church of England School30.7%40%95.2
Sandbach High School and Sixth Form College 73%103.1
Sawtry Community College 65%103.1
Sheringham High School and Sixth Form Centre16.8%51%101.0
Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys4.1%94%91.9
Sir Graham Balfour High School24.0%37%98.5
Sir Thomas Boteler High School15.7%27%98.3
Southfield Technology College29.7%31%101.3
St Anselm's College6.6%88%98.1
St Benedict's Catholic High School21.4%73%108.7
St Benedict's School 87%98.9
St Bernard's Catholic High School9.0%53%97.9
St Cuthbert Mayne School14.7%49%100.0
"St Edmund Arrowsmith Catholic High School, Ashton-in-Makerfield"15.7%58%101.9
St Gregory's Catholic Comprehensive School 72%102.3
St John Rigby Catholic College 32%92.6
St Joseph's Catholic High School14.4%37%96.2
St Margaret's School 83%95.6
St Mark's CofE School57.1%37%100.5
St Robert of Newminster Roman Catholic School13.6%61%101.9
Stamford High School32.1%11%93.4
Stanley Park High School12.7%22%92.1
Stanley School of Technology29.3%28%95.2
Steyning Grammar School21.7%58%99.5
Swavesey Village College12.8%72%102.6
Thamesview School37.7%16%92.6
The Astor of Hever Community School 50%100.2
The Beaconsfield School45.6%41%94.3
The Brooksbank School 47%100.3
The Canterbury High School55.8%29%95.1
The Channel School51.7%9%92.2
The Crossley Heath School3.3%99%91.9
The English Martyrs School and Sixth Form College 62%102.7
The Hayling School 31%98.1
The Holt School 79%103.3
The Kingswinford School 69%104.8
The Petersfield School14.7%58%96.4
The Piggott School14.6%65%103.0
The Priory School28.2%41%100.2
The Rickstones School35.4%43%95.8
The Ridings High School13.8%65%102.6
The Royal Docks Community School51.0%22%99.0
The Royal Liberty School 25%95.0
Thomas Alleyne's High School 65%101.0
Trentham High School3.1%48%97.5
Trinity School26.4%53%98.2
Tunbridge Wells High School34.3%28%101.6
Valley Park Community School26.8%25%93.6
Varndean School21.1%54%106.5
Walbottle Campus Technology College12.4%37%94.0
Wallington High School for Girls 99%104.7
Wanstead High School32.0%51%98.2
Weald of Kent Grammar School1.7%99%102.4
Westergate Community School 42%96.1
Weston Road High School9.8%56%100.0
Westwood College7.4%26%92.8
Whitecross High School8.5%34%98.5
Whitefield School7.9%21%99.0
Wigmore High School6.1%73%99.4
William Allitt School 39%94.2
William Beamont Community High School5.2%20%93.7
William de Ferrers School6.3%63%99.8
Winterton Comprehensive School2.8%44%98.5
Wisewood Secondary School 40%96.1
Woodstock Girls' School 80%104.0
Woolston Community High School8.6%50%98.9

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"A new way of assessing schools' performance"
The 2001 school and college performance tables

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Analysis

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17 Jul 01 | UK Education
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